How To make Mexican Chicken & Barley Chili
1 c Chopped onion
1 Garlic clove; minced
1 tb Vegetable oil
3 c Water
1/2 c Medium QUAKER Barley*
16 oz Canned tomatoes, chopped
-- undrained 16 oz No-salt-added tomato sauce
14 1/2 oz Reduced sodium chicken broth
-- (about 1-3/4 cups) 11 oz Canned whole kernal corn
drained 4 oz Canned chopped green chiles
:
drained 1 tb Chili powder
1/2 ts Ground cumin
3 c Chopped, cooked chicken
-- (about 1-1/2 pounds) In 4-quart saucepan or Dutch oven, cook onion and garlic in oil until onion is tender. Add remaining ingredients except chicken. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat to low; cover. Simmer 40 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add cooked chicken; continue cooking 5 to 10 minutes or until chicken is heated through and barley is tender. Add additional water or chicken broth if chili becomes too thick upon standing. Nine 1-cup servings *NOTE: To use Quick QUAKER Barley, substitute 3/4 cup quick barley for medium barley and decrease water to 2 cups. Cook onion and garlic as directed above. Add remaining ingredients except chicken. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat to low; cover. Simmer 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add cooked chicken. Continue simmering 5 to 10 minutes or until chicken is heated through and barley is tender.
How To make Mexican Chicken & Barley Chili's Videos
World's GREATEST Chili Recipe - SO EASY!!
Here is a simple recipe for Chili will keep you coming back for more. There is nothing like homemade chili. After this you will be a chili master.
Support this channel if you like what we are doing.
Here is where you can purchase the items or ingredients in this video while supporting this channel at the same time :-). (amazon affiliate links below)
ORDER CHILI POWDER HERE
THE TOOLS I USE MOST
All Clad Fry Pans: -
Schmidt Brothers Knives: -
Wood Cutting Board: -
Utility Tong: -
Hamilton Beach Stand Mixer: -
MY CAMERA EQUIPMENT
Panasonic Lumix G7: -
Samsung WB250F: -
Lighting Kit: -
Tripod: -
----
Music by
Epidemic Sound
epidemicsound.com
Check them out!
----
Stock photo by:
depositphotos.com
Check them out!
THE BEST COWBOY STEW RECIPE
Cowboy Stew Recipe below:
6 Slices Bacon (chopped)
1½ Lbs. Lean Ground Beef (85/15)
1 Medium Sweet Onion (diced)
3 Tbsp. Garlic (minced)
1 Tsp. Salt
1 Tsp. Garlic Powder
1 Tsp. Onion Powder
1 Tsp. Black Pepper
1 Tsp. Chili Powder
2 Cans Rotel Diced Tomatoes with Green Chilies
1 22oz. Cans Bush’s Grillin’ Beans
1 Can Ranch Beans
1 15oz. Can Sweet Corn (drained)
3 Russet Potatoes (peeled and cubed)
2 Cups Beef Broth
2 Tbsp. Parsley (chopped)
How to Make Instant Pot Buffalo Chicken Chili | Jeffrey Eisner
Watch Jeffrey Eisner show you how to make a Buffalo wing-inspired chili (and dip!) in an Instant Pot with ground chicken, beans + LOTS of cheese.
This is my healing food
#shorts
Beef and Barley Stew Recipe - How to Make Stewed Beef Shank with Barley
Learn how to make a Beef and Barley Stew Recipe! Go to for the ingredient amounts, extra information, and many, many more video recipes! I hope you enjoy this easy Beef and Barley Stew Recipe!
Chicken soup 101
Thanks Allform for sponsoring! Click here for 20% off the sofa of your choice! We chose the whiskey leather three-seater with chaise.
This is not a recipe. Here's some general guidance for making a chicken soup:
Buy a whole chicken and a roughly equal quantity of vegetables (by raw weight). Any vegetables are fine but definitely get some form of onion in there. Dry noddles or any other dry grains are nice, but you won't need much because of how much they expand during cooking. Get whatever spices you want, but turmeric makes chicken soup look especially pretty. Maybe buy fresh herbs for garnish, and/or a little lemon to squeeze in.
Put your chicken in a big pot, along with any giblets that came with it. If you have any old aromatic vegetables (onions, carrots, celery, etc) hanging around that aren't super good anymore, you could throw those in but I wouldn't waste good fresh veggies on this step. Cover with water, bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer and cook until the chicken is fall-apart tender, 1-2 hours.
While you're waiting, cut up all your vegetables. Remember they'll shrink when cooking, so cut the chunks a little larger than how you want them.
Pull the chicken out and let it cool. Fish or strain out any remaining inedible solids. Dump in the vegetables along with a couple pinches of salt (be conservative — you can add more to taste later) and simmer until they're soft, 30-60 minutes. If you need to add more water to keep everything submerged, that's fine, but keep in mind the veg will release a lot of water as it cooks. You can always add more later.
If you're using dry noodles or rice or some such, throw that in when you're about 30 minutes from the end. Put in less than you think you'll want — it'll expand 2-3x as it cooks.
While you're waiting, pick all the meat off of the chicken — using your fingers will allow you to feel for any bones, cartilage or slimy bits you don't want to eat. (If you want, you can brown all these scraps in the oven and then simmer them for a second stock you can use later.) Roughly chop through your pile of picked meat so that you won't have any super-long strings of shredded chicken in the final soup. Put the meat back into the soup before you taste for seasoning.
Taste for seasoning. Add salt and any spices you like to taste. You could also stir in some fresh herbs and maybe a little lemon juice (or vinegar) to taste, or you could let people do that in their individual bowls.